Difference between revisions of "Boeuf sur le Toit"

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'''Le Boeuf sur le Toit''' was a gay drinking club in Soho, from the 1920s.
 
'''Le Boeuf sur le Toit''' was a gay drinking club in Soho, from the 1920s.
  
"But the best was Le Boeuf sur le Toit, beautifully furnished. Leonard Blackett at the piano, Teddy Jackson owned it... After the war ... Dolly bought the Boeuf and changed its name to the Romilly Club which is where [[Guy Burgess|Guy]] [Burgess] fell down the stairs and had to go to hospital. Someone pushed him actually."<ref>Jack Hewitt, ''Sunday Times'' magazine, 7 April 1991. Quoted in ''[[On Queer Street]]'' by [[Hugh David]].</ref>
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"But the best was Le Boeuf sur le Toit, beautifully furnished. Leonard Blackett at the piano, Teddy Jackson owned it... After the war ... Dolly [Mayers] bought the Boeuf and changed its name to the Romilly Club which is where [[Guy Burgess|Guy]] [Burgess] fell down the stairs and had to go to hospital. Someone pushed him actually."<ref>Jack Hewitt, ''Sunday Times'' magazine, 7 April 1991. Quoted in ''[[On Queer Street]]'' by [[Hugh David]].</ref>
  
 
See [[Timeline of West End Bars and Clubs]].
 
See [[Timeline of West End Bars and Clubs]].

Revision as of 12:06, 5 June 2012

Le Boeuf sur le Toit was a gay drinking club in Soho, from the 1920s.

"But the best was Le Boeuf sur le Toit, beautifully furnished. Leonard Blackett at the piano, Teddy Jackson owned it... After the war ... Dolly [Mayers] bought the Boeuf and changed its name to the Romilly Club which is where Guy [Burgess] fell down the stairs and had to go to hospital. Someone pushed him actually."[1]

See Timeline of West End Bars and Clubs.

References

  1. Jack Hewitt, Sunday Times magazine, 7 April 1991. Quoted in On Queer Street by Hugh David.

http://patrickleighfermor.wordpress.com/2010/04/14/joan-leigh-fermor-obituary-from-the-independent/